New Jersey Newspapers - July 23, 1980

Camden Courier-Post

Green hotter as Phils cool off

 

By Ray Finocchiaro, Gannett News Service

 

CINCINNATI – Dallas Green read the riot act to the Phillies again last night. The manager's Richter-scale assessment of the night's play carried through two closed doors.

 

It all boiled down to character, Green said when the shouting stopped. But he's said it 1,000 times before. Last night at Riverfront Stadium was 1,001: A Baseball Oddity.

 

"All I can do is scream and yell and kick and holler," said Green after the 3-2 loss to the Reds, Steve Carlton's fifth defeat and the club's fifth straight loss.

 

“l DIDNT DO much kicking."

 

But the screaming, yelling and hollering was evident. The question remains: will it do any more good than it did the first 1,000 times around?

 

"If you can't gear up for a guy going for the Cy Young Award, who can you gear up for?" Green wondered. "Lefty could've won this one. He could've won this one 4-0 easily."

 

The problem, the manager reiterated, is character.

 

YOU STILL go back to character – that's what makes a ball club," Green said. "If character can't evolve and develop, we're in a helluva shape because last year's character wasn't very nice on this ball club. But we've told 'em that. We've gone through that over a thousand times."

 

And the club's current character?

 

"I'd like to think we've improved," Green said. "There's more sincerity, more aggressiveness, more wanting than there's been in the past. Maintaining that character is something."

 

The words came slowly. "We all have peaks and valleys. How we handle them is the test of character. We're going into a valley and it's going to test us. We can't depend on the damn ability all the time."

 

 LAST NIGHT'S offensive show and defensive goat turned out to be Mike Schmidt. Not only did Schmidt's throwing error open the door for two Reds' runs, but Schmidt, currently two-for-22 at the plate, stranded five runners, three at third base.

 

"And two with less than two out," Green added.

 

Green was obviously annoyed by the non-support of Carlton.

 

"Lefty pitched fine. He held 'em to one run, the team held 'em to three," he said. "It's frustrating. This is the time of the year when we should not be doing the kind of things we're doing to beat ourselves and not get runs in.

 

"I buy a slump. Except for a few guys, nobody's swinging the bat well. But that's going to happen over 162 games. Why get excited about it? Just gear up and play exciting baseball."

 

THE PHILLIES excited no one, particularly Green, last night. They had winner Mario Soto in hot water early, putting two men on base in the first inning.

 

Greg Gross walked, Bake McBride singled and both moved up a base on Johnny Bench's passed ball. But Soto fanned both Schmidt and Garry Maddox to give him 95 K's in 94 innings.

 

"I worked pretty good on Schmidt," said Soto, who hadn't pitched a complete game since August, 1977 – until last night. "He was the man I was careful with men on base. I didn't want to give in to him. If you do, you get beat."

 

Soto wasn't as fortunate with Bob Boone, who drilled his sixth homer over the left field fence in the second inning.

 

"THAT WAS A hanging slider, right in his face," said Soto. "That was the only bad pitch I made all night."

 

The Reds got the run back in their half of the second when Bench singled, raced to third on Ray Knight's double and scored on Dan Driessen's sacrifice fly. T

 

he game stayed tied until the sixth when Schmidt's throw on Bench's grounder pulled Pete Rose off first base. "

 

Bench just outhustled him, that's all," said Green, barely disguising his disgust.

 

Knight tripled Bench home, then scored himself on Driessen's single.

 

GREEN REJECTED the notion that Schmidt might be carrying his problems at the plate onto the field with him.

 

"He usually doesn't do that," Green said. "He's played this game long enough to have been through it before. He's battled through it before and he'll battle through it again."

 

The Phils scored their final run in the seventh with another of their two-out rallies.

 

Rose walked and went to third on Gross' single to center. McBride singled to right, scoring Rose. Schmidt, who'd already stranded three baserunners, upped his count to five with a long fly to right.

 

GREEN SAYS he doesn't plan to give up his oratory.

 

"If I keep yelling and screaming, somebody will listen sooner or later, if they want to or not," Green said. "If I didn't think they wanted to listen, I wouldn't be here."

 

Do they really want to listen?

 

"Nobody said it would be easy," Green sighed. Then he paused for a moment.

 

"I can hear Danny (Ozark) chuckling now."

 

PHIL UPS Carlton's five strikeouts temporarily moved him into sixth place on the all-time list with 2,856, passing Jim Bunning and the still-active Ferguson Jenkins... Bench's second-inning single tied him with Edd Roush for fourth place on the Reds' all-time hit list with 1,784... Reds (16-9) and New York Mets are only clubs with winning records against Carlton... Soto on beating Carlton: "Everybody knows he's gonna pitch a good game. I'm just glad I won."... McBride's 12-game hitting streak is a club high. Bake did it once before and Maddox tied it... Phils went over the million mark in road attendance last night with a paid crowd of 28,079... Nino Espinosa will face Bruce Berenyi (1-0) tonight at 8:05 before the Phils bead home... Atlanta opens the homestand Friday with a 5:35 twinighter.

The Press of Atlantic City

Reds Make Phils Blue

 

Cincinnati 3, Phila. 2

 

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati’s Dan Driessen knocked in two runs with a sacrifice fly and a single and Ray Knight rapped two extra-base hits Tuesday night as the Reds edged Philadelphia 3-2 and foiled Steve Carlton's bid for a 16th victory.

 

Knight doubled and tripled off Carlton, 15-5. He also struck out in the fourth inning, when Carlton moved into sixth place on the all-time strikeout list. 

 

The Phils’ left-hander, striking out five in six innings to pad his league-leading total to 173, moved one ahead of former Phillie Jim Bunning and Texas’ Ferguson Jenkins with 2,856 career strikeouts. 

 

Philadelphia, dropping its fifth straight game for its longest losing streak of the year, scored in the second inning off Mario Soto, 4-4, on Bob Boone’s solo homer to left, his sixth of the season. The Reds tied it in the bottom of the inning when Johnny Bench singled, Knight doubled and Driessen hit a sacrifice fly. 

 

With one out in the sixth, Bench reached first on Mike Schmidt’s throwing error and Knight followed with a triple to right-center. Driessen then singled to left for his second RBI of the game. 

 

Pete Rose walked and Greg Gross and Bake McBride singled in the seventh for the Phillies’ other run. 

 

Soto finished with a nine-hitter and seven strikeouts.